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Latest University of Washington News | Page 2

Athletes looking for a competitive edge may find it within their gut microbiome
Online rumors sparked by the Trump assassination attempt spread rapidly, on both ends of the political spectrum
Unexpected role of OTX2 drives aggressive medulloblastoma
Q&A: Climate Change Toll On Roads – Two UW Professors Weigh In
Do We Really Know How Our Data Is Used?
Wolves’ return has had only small impact on deer populations in NE Washington, study shows
Poop has been an easy target for microbiome research, but voyages into the small intestine shed new light on ways to improve gut health
AI Speech-to-text Can Hallucinate Violent Language
PFAS Are Toxic ‘forever Chemicals’ That Linger In Our Air, Water, Soil And Bodies – Here’s How To Keep Them Out Of…
AI search answers are the fast food of your information diet – convenient and tasty, but no substitute for good nutrition
AI plus gene editing promises to shift biotech into high gear
Parse Biosciences Launches Trailmaker Data Analysis Platform to Simplify Single Cell Sequencing
In the Field: UW researcher headed to Alaska to study factors that lead to permafrost thaw and to educate foster care youth
AI headphones let wearer listen to a single person in a crowd, by looking at them just once
Meat Freshness Labels Could Replace Use-by Dates
Packaged-meat labels that show freshness could replace use-by dates, reducing food waste
Unlocking the future of biotechnology: ICED revolutionises enzyme design
UW atmospheric scientist participating in field campaign to improve Western snowfall, drought forecasts
How newborn chicks are helping to settle a centuries-old debate about cognition and our senses
Global Burden of Disease Study 2021 provides insights into the health of New Zealanders
UW-led project to study ozone, atmospheric layers a finalist for next-generation NASA satellite
Low testosterone levels in men linked to higher risk of death
Navy Growler jet noise over Whidbey Island could impact 74,000 people’s health
Can Wikipedia-like citations on YouTube curb misinformation?
Everyday life and its variability influenced human evolution at least as much as rare activities like big-game hunting
Speaker: Content moderation is free speech, not censorship
Power outages linked to heat and storms are rising, and low-income communities are most at risk, as a new NYC study shows
Scientists solve chemical mystery at the interface of biology and technology
New Circuit Boards Can Be Repeatedly Recycled
New technology uncovers mechanism affecting generation of new COVID variants
Ice age climate analysis reduces worst-case warming expected from rising CO2
Saturn’s ocean moon Enceladus is able to support life − my research team is working out how to detect extraterrestrial cells there
Infections after surgery are more likely due to bacteria already on your skin than from microbes in the hospital − new research
New report ‘braids’ Indigenous and Western knowledge for forest adaptation strategies against climate change
Everyday social interactions predict language development in infants
If life exists on Jupiter’s moon Europa, scientists might soon be able to detect it
What four decades of canned salmon reveal about marine food webs
In the Field: UW researchers traveling to capture total solar eclipse
Cancer-predisposition variants associated with adverse outcomes in rhabdomyosarcoma
Signs of life detectable in single ice grain emitted from extraterrestrial moons
Citizen scientist group finds 15 rare ‘active asteroids’
Free school meals for all may reduce childhood obesity, while easing financial and logistical burdens for families and schools
UW researchers taught kids to code with cultural research and embroidery machines
What we know so far about the rumoured Apple smart ring
AI analysis of historical satellite images show USSR collapse in 1990s increased methane emissions, despite lower oil and gas production
Salty foods are making people sick − in part by poisoning their microbiomes
Immune cells can adapt to invading pathogens, deciding whether to fight now or prepare for the next battle
Scientists CT-scanned thousands of natural history specimens, which you can access for free